I love how the further down the administration chain they went the less people sounded like robots.
Seeing those styles back then is always fascinating.
Ha kinda cool. I worked at Sony for many years as a supervisor in many departments. My father-in-law was there during the VHS and PS1 days as an engineer. My sister worked there when DVDs first came out and her literal job was to watch movies, make sure nothing skipped and all options worked. That sounds cool but she recalls watching Stuart Little a billion times :v: I did everything from packaging to quality control. I oversaw the entire process of first press of the PS2, DVD, and Bluray to shipping to all over the US. Basically, if you bought a bluray, it came from me in Indiana. Also the product lines looking nothing like that now, they're conveyor belts with a punch of people standing around them putting the product down the line for the last guy to put them into the box or skid.
I also talked to many people who worked there during the Laserdisc and Betamax days. They had some stories
[QUOTE=mark6789;52469890]Ha kinda cool. I worked at Sony for many years as a supervisor in many departments. My father-in-law was there during the VHS and PS1 days as an engineer. My sister worked there when DVDs first came out and her literal job was to watch movies, make sure nothing skipped and all options worked. That sounds cool but she recalls watching Stuart Little a billion times :v: I did everything from packaging to quality control. I oversaw the entire process of first press of the PS2, DVD, and Bluray to shipping to all over the US. Basically, if you bought a bluray, it came from me in Indiana. Also the product lines looking nothing like that now, they're conveyor belts with a punch of people standing around them putting the product down the line for the last guy to put them into the box or skid.
I also talked to many people who worked there during the Laserdisc and Betamax days. They had some stories[/QUOTE]
Didn't know Sony had that big of a presence here :v:
[QUOTE=Squarebob;52470055]Didn't know Sony had that big of a presence here :v:[/QUOTE]
It's been in Indiana for a long time now but unfortunately due to bad management, streaming, and some other things, Sony will probably close it's manufacturing in 5 years I predict. During 2011 we had 500+ on the line working on product and tons of overtime to fast forward 2016 we had little over a 100 workers with sending people home :3
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